Read A Reason to Believe Online
Authors: Diana Copland
tightened on Kiernan’s neck.
Matt deepened the kiss. Kiernan’s arm snaked
around his neck, fingers sliding into the hair on the
back of his head. Matt groaned into his open
mouth, his free arm circling the slender body, and
Kiernan surged forward, crawling over the
divider, closing the distance between them. His
knee slid between Matt’s legs, pressing up against
his balls, and Matt gasped at the longing that shot
through him. He pulled him in and held on tight,
relishing the strong chest pressed against his.
A wash of light illuminated the cab of the
Bronco like the flash of a camera strobe, and they
separated with a startled jerk. Matt’s first instinct
was to search for a photographer, but he realized a
car was approaching slowly down the deserted
street. The driver had switched on his bright lights
in the gloom. Relieved it wasn’t paparazzi, Matt
exhaled shakily. Kiernan withdrew to his own seat
as the car crept past.
“Sorry,” Kiernan said, his fingers lightly
touching his swollen lips. “I got carried away. I
shouldn’t have jumped you like that…”
Matt caught Kiernan’s hand, squeezing firmly.
Startled eyes turned to him.
“Don’t apologize,” Matt said. “Unless you’re
really sorry.”
A slow smile lit Kiernan’s face. “I’m not. I just
thought you might be.”
“I’m not,” he said, faintly startled to find it was
true. “But I think we should probably pick this up
later, someplace roomier and more private. I’m
too old to be making out in my car.”
“You’re never too old to make out in your car,”
Kiernan countered. “You’d have to be pretty
athletic to fuck in this one, but I’ll bet it could be
done.”
Matt stared at him. “You,” he said pointedly,
“say the damnedest things.” Kiernan’s laugh was
infectious. “Put on your seat belt.” Matt fought a
smile as he put the car into gear.
When they arrived at the Hilton, Matt pulled
around and parked near the entrance to the loading
dock. The night manager had suggested they
continue to use the back entrance as a precaution.
The snow had been pushed to the curb by the
plows and was nearly knee deep. Kiernan was
struggling as he tried to make his way through it,
using the car to steady himself.
Matt grinned. “Problems?”
“Oh, shut up. Just because your legs are so
damned long.”
“But you think the snow is cool, remember?”
Kiernan finally hopped over the berm, catching
himself on the hood when his feet slipped out from
under him. He gave Matt a disgruntled look.
“Okay, so maybe this part is a pain in the ass.” He
straightened, brushing his hands off on his pants.
Matt heard the sound of an engine and glanced
over his shoulder. A dark sedan was heading
toward them, tires nearly silent, its headlights
cutting a path through the drifting snow. Something
about the car struck Matt as being off. Even in the
bitter cold, the driver’s window was open. A
gloved hand emerged.
He didn’t make a conscious decision to move. It
was training, and instinct. One moment he was
standing by the driver’s door, the next he was
grabbing Kiernan around the waist and throwing
him to the snowy ground. He heard the telltale
noise of a silencer as the shooter clicked off round
after round, the sound magnified by the odd
acoustics created by the snowy street. Falling
heavily on top of Kiernan, Matt shielded him with
his body. Muffled thuds sounded around him as
bullets hit the snow. Small geysers of ice arced up
from the impact, covering him in crystals.
“Matt!” Kiernan’s hands curled into Matt’s
shoulders. A sharp metallic clang rang out as a
bullet slammed into the side of the Bronco right
above their heads, and Matt flinched reflexively.
Another bullet thudded into the snow next to
Kiernan’s shoulder, and Matt had a glimpse of
frightened eyes. He shifted quickly, shoving
Kiernan under the Bronco.
Matt steeled himself for pain, waiting for a
bullet to find his exposed back. Instead, he heard
the sedan’s wheels spinning in the snow and
looked over his shoulder to see it speeding off
down the street. The reason for the hasty departure
became clear when a pickup truck headed their
way from the other direction, its headlights
illuminating the street. Matt exhaled heavily and
flopped over onto his back in the snow.
The truck rolled to a stop. “You fellas okay over
there?” a male voice called out.
Matt pushed himself up onto his elbows, his
heart still racing.
The driver, an older man wearing a dark
skullcap, was leaning across the seat to an open
window. “Did ya fall on the ice?”
“Yeah. But I’m okay.” He looked over at
Kiernan, who was still lying on his back half under
the car, his chest moving rapidly up and down with
each noisy breath. “Are you okay?” he asked,
touching Kiernan’s arm.
Kiernan rolled his head on the snow, his pupils
frightened pinpoints in the startling blue irises. He
nodded.
Matt turned back to the Good Samaritan. “Yeah,
we’re all right. Thanks for asking.”
“Ya need help getting up?” The man looked like
he might open his door, but Matt sat up, waving
him away.
“No. We’re fine, really. Thanks again for
stopping.”
The driver rolled up his window and continued
on his way.
“Are you hurt?” Matt moved his hand to
Kiernan’s chest. He could feel his heart racing
under his palm.
“Someone just shot at us, didn’t they?” he asked,
his voice strained. Matt nodded. Kiernan was still
breathing hard, but to Matt’s surprise, he suddenly
looked more excited than frightened. “We’ve
rattled someone’s cage then, haven’t we?”
“We’ve done something,” Matt replied, pushing
to his feet. He grabbed Kiernan’s hands and pulled
him up. “Come on, back in the Bronco. We can’t
stand out here in the open.” He unlocked the
driver’s side door. “Get in and crawl over the
divider.”
Kiernan got in without even pausing to brush
himself off. “Where are we going?”
Matt climbed in and slammed the door. “Back to
my house. Call your sister and tell her to meet us
there with your stuff.” He pulled away from the
curb. “Until we know who the hell that was, I’m
your new constant companion.”
“I can live with that,” Kiernan said softly.
Matt kept his eyes front, scanning the street for
any sign of the dark sedan.
* * *
emphatically as they walked in through the back
door of Matt’s house. Matt flicked the lights on as
he passed, shrugging out of his overcoat and
tossing it on the kitchen table.
“That’s your call.” The adrenaline rush was
starting to wane, but his nerves were stretched
tight as a piano wire, thrumming uncomfortably
just beneath the surface of his skin. When he
thought of what might have happened if he’d been a
second slower, it made him sick to his stomach.
There had been a telephone conversation
between Kiernan and his sister but he hadn’t heard
much of it. His heartbeat had been too loud in his
ears, his eyes darting from the street to the
rearview mirror, searching for anything that might
indicate the dark sedan was following them.
“She’s already unhappy about my staying
behind. If I tell her about what happened, she
won’t leave.” Kiernan took off his leather jacket
and loosened his tie. “She always has been too
much of a mom. She needs to get back and do some
things for herself, and I want her as far away from
this as possible.”
Matt jerked his suit jacket off of his shoulders,
his agitation suddenly taking the form of anger as
he pulled his own tie loose. “If you were smart,
you’d go with her.” He saw movement to his left,
but he still tensed when he felt a hand come to rest
on his back.
“You okay?”
“I’m fine.” Matt shrugged the hand away. “I
need to call it in.” He patted down his pockets,
searching for his cell phone.
“Call what in?”
“It’s called ‘shots fired.’”
“Matt.” Kiernan caught his arm, and Matt sent
him a hard look. He released him and took a step
away. “Do you think that’s a good idea?”
“Shots were fired within the city limits, in my
city. That may happen all the time in L.A., but here
it’s somewhat unusual. I have a responsibility to
report it.”
“Fine, do what you need to do. But you might
want to think for just a minute. Shots were fired,
yeah, but at us, not at random. And I think it’s
pretty clear they had something to do with what
happened earlier today. Do you really want to clue
your colleagues in on what we were doing this
afternoon? I would think the last thing you need is
for Branson to know we were in Abby’s
bedroom.”
Matt stared into the open face and finally
nodded, the movement jerky. “Fine. I won’t call it
in.”
Kiernan took a cautious step forward. “Matt.”
Matt held up a stiff hand. “I need coffee.”
“Okay, fine.”
Kiernan stayed close, and Matt wished he’d just
go away. Instead of ordering him out, he slammed
things around. He pulled filters out of the cupboard
and threw them onto the counter, and slapped on
the tap to fill the glass pot. When he’d added
coffee and poured the water into the well, he was
trembling so hard he spilled some onto the sink.
Infuriated, he punched the On button so hard, the
coffeemaker scooted six inches across the
countertop.
Kiernan hopped onto the counter beside him,
and Matt looked at him as if he’d lost his mind.
“What the fuck are you doing?”
“Putting myself at eye level. Now, are you going
to quit acting like an ass and talk to me, or is there
some other appliance you’d like to abuse?”
“You don’t know me well enough to make a
comment like that,” Matt hissed through clenched
teeth.
“I know you better than you think,” Kiernan
replied, his voice mild. When Matt made a noise
of disgust and started to turn away, Kiernan caught
his arm in a surprisingly firm grip.
Matt looked pointedly at his hand and then up
into Kiernan’s eyes. “Let. Go.”
“No. And in regards to how well I do or do not
know you, I know that no matter how pissed I make
you, you won’t take a swing at me. You’re not a
violent man. Believe me, I know plenty about
those. You won’t even twist your arm hard enough
to get away because you might hurt mine in the
process.”
Matt gritted his teeth but didn’t wrench his hand
free.
“Matt, I’m all right. Not even a scratch, see?”
He pulled Matt’s hand to his chest and Matt
allowed it, not protesting when he pressed his
palm over his heart and held it there. “Feel that?
Still beating steadily, thanks to you.”
Matt felt his anger drain away as quickly as it
had come, and he took his first full breath since
he’d spotted the sedan’s open window. He closed
his eyes and let his head fall forward.
Kiernan sighed and his hands bracketed Matt’s
face, urging his chin up. To Matt’s surprise, his
lips were covered, urged to part, and soft breath
filled his mouth. Kiernan’s fingers carded the short
hair above his collar. He made a startled sound in
his throat and felt Kiernan’s tongue slide along his
lower lip before slipping between his teeth. After
a moment he drew back, but only far enough that
their mouths were barely separated.
“See,” he whispered. Matt felt the rush of his
breath. “Everything still works fine.”
Matt wasn’t sure if it was the unexpectedness of
the comment or pure relief, but he laughed roughly.
He caressed the curve of muscle beneath his palm
and stepped into the vee created by Kiernan’s
spread thighs. “Good to know.”
“I certainly think so.” Kiernan smiled against his
lips, and then he was pressing back in, mouth open,